Tuesday, 27 January 2015

Into the channels: 26/01/2015

DR Congo 1 - 1 Tunisia

Welcome back! To the oil-rich dictatorship of Equatorial Guinea, renowned for being a bit unfriendly to workers from neighbouring countries, and for not really having the infrastructure to do things like host the players and staff that come to participate in a major international football tournament at very short notice.

Yannick Bolasie (left) wasn't the only Congo player to go for blonde streaks
Estadio de Bata, in Bata
Bolasie has been enjoying Bata.

From Yala's beard's Facebook page
Fans of the Democratic Republic of Congo will have been enjoying Bolasie, too. Even if they wish he would have a proper shave, and that their team's kit still had a nice red sash across it. Because despite such transgressions, Bolasie's goal in the opening fixture (meaning that heading into the weekend, he was the tournament's joint top scorer, joining 28 others on 1 goal) meant the DRC were in with a good chance of making the next round, and a quarter final fixture against the Republic of Congo. And when I say a good chance, I mean that they had exactly the same chance as Cape Verde. If both teams finished their respective, simultaneously-played fixtures with the same scoreline, progression would be decided by the seventh criteria: the drawing of lots. Which sounded exciting, as much as I'm for the integrity of football and whatever.


Mark Bright pointed out in his commentary for British Eurosport that a lot of the Tunisian players were wearing two pairs of socks: one, the official team sock, provided by their sponsors; the other, a smaller cotton sock worn so that their feet weren't slipping around inside their shoes.

The opening 10 minutes saw two headers from set-pieces by Yassine Chikhaoui: one attacking, one defending. Both of the Tunisian number 9's efforts were harmless.

The former Etoile du Sahel striker is particularly known for being very good at Wikipedia
Chikhaoui was definitely the stand-out player of the first half, though his side probably should have put the game to bed long before Congo started getting into the game. Here's the best chance of the first quarter:


The top shot shows Ferjani Sassi shooting, and being blocked on the goalline by Joel Kimwaki (of the DRC's heavyweights TP Mazembe), after Chikhaoui all-too-easily ran around the DRC left-back and squared the ball to him. Unfortunately his shot was almost as light as the attendance in Bata, or as the chance of the game in Ebebeyin being played had it been an English league game (full disclosure: Cape Verde vs Zambia was basically a waterpolo match, with similar scenes to the ones seen in the World Club Cup game between Cruz Azul and Western Sydney Wanderers in Morocco at the end of last year). Chikhaoui then stabs a second opportunity from the same move wide at the far post, which he should have converted (bottom picture).

DRC looked flat throughout the first 15 minutes, and were far more stretched out than the Carthage Eagles. Their opponents were looking more patient, and better at holding the ball up. Sassi's footwork and Wahbi Khazri's over-lapping runs were early highlights.

Aside from Bolasie, DRC did have a few nifty players. They were bereft of injured captain Youssouf Mulumbu, but had Dynamo Kiev's Dieumerci Mbokani up front, a man who managed to play for both Standard Liege and Anderlecht without any of the grace of Steven Defour. Not that he had an easier time of it:
The start of his spell at Anderlecht was dramatic, first injuring himself during one of his first training sessions, meaning he would be sidelined for at least two months.[6] Then, about one week later his five month old son, David Mbokani, died of a cardiac arrest in his sleep.[7]
They also have the oldest player at the tournament, 38 year-old goalkeeper Robert Kidiaba. He wasn't showing off about his age, though. In fact, he was trying to play down his experience as much as possible - especially when it came to dealing with corners. Tunisia got another with 20 minutes on the clock, after Chikhaoui was the last man to receive one of several sharp one-touch passes, running around the right full-back, then cutting back inside and shooting, albeit not far enough away from Kidiaba, who was able to parry, bailing out his right-back in the process.

Chikhaoui cuts inside two flailing Congolese defenders
Up at the other end, a dribble from Bolasie on the right hand side of the area resulted in a blocked cross and a corner, unconverted, but about as close as Congo had come to troubling their opponents' goal in the opening stages. It took the entire first quarter of the game for Congo to find a passing rhythm, Bolasie's movement as a right wing-forward providing them with an outlet, albeit not one they were utilising.

Mazembe's Jean Kasusula struck Congo's sole good set piece of the game
Then, just as Congo were getting into the game, another really good turn from Chikhaoui inside the box resulted in the ball ricocheting off a defender and into the flightpath of Ahmed Akaichi. 1-0 to Tunisia.

Akaichi (top left) heads the ball to the right of Kidiaba, who is falling the other way
Almost immediately after that, things looked like they were about to get a lot worse for Congo:

Chikhaoui (top) strikes a rocket of a shot into the DRC net, but the goal is (rightly) disallowed as he was a bit offside
So, at 1-0, Cape Verde (drawing 0-0 with 2012 champions Zambia) were going through with Tunisia; Congo needed a goal; and Mbokani was very frustrated.

37 minutes in, and Bolasie decides to pass a free-kick from just outside the area, rather than shoot. His ball down the left hand side to Werder Bremen's Cedric Makiadi is too strong, though, and what was a great opportunity is needlessly wasted. Really poor.

More really sloppy passing from DRC allows Chikhaoui (bottom, middle) to slip a ball through to Akaichi (top), but he is offside
This is probably where DR Congo coach Florent Ibenge felt like he was watching the game from
Akaichi scored again straight from the restart, but was very offside. If only offside didn't exist - how many goals would Tunisia have scored? This time Kidiaba allowed the ball to pass straight through him, a la referees in Pro Evolution Soccer games on the PS2 - but I don't think he was counting on the offside flag being raised.

Tunisia sat back and looked comfortable, as Congo's passes fizzed a little too much, as if they were playing with a very slightly open can of Tyskie in a pub car park at 2am.

A 54th minute backheel from Congo's Firmin Ndombe Mubele (middle) let in Mbokani for his first chance of the game, but keeper Aymen Mathlouthi got there first
The first decent cross for Mbokani came from Issama Mpeko (of Angolans Kabuscorp) on 62 minutes, but was headed over.

Akaichi should have passed, rather than shooting from the position he is shown in in this image, and lashing it wide and over
Khazri was also guilty of wasting a good opportunity a few minutes later for Tunisia
The Tunisian chances above came as Congo applied themselves to the task at hand. Khazri's shot specifically was the result of the breakdown of an attack that had culminated in a tantalising low cross from Bolasie, who got a couple of good ones in from the left flank in the second half. The game was starting to open up.

Goal!
Loteteka Bokila! A quarter of the game left. It's a flick from Mbokani, a very gentle touch down - whilst travelling at speed - and then an immediate shot. It's a good goal. And it means Congo are going through with Tunisia.

Hamza Younes has only been on the pitch a minute when his 74th minute shot from Ali Maaloul's cut-back is blocked by Kidiaba
It was time for both sides to decide what they would do: stick or twist? A winner for Congo would knock out Tunisia, whereas a goal for either side in the other game would knock out Congo.

Yannick Bolasie decides to twist
 An outside of the boot nutmeg from Mbemba set up a shooting opportunity, lashed just over from outside the box; another shot from just outside the area was scuppered by a bobble. Congo ended the game in the ascendancy, though they nevertheless were lucky that their opponents didn't finish them off whilst they had the chance. Tunisia looked far more potent.

At the end of the game, both coaches embraced, relieved to progress to the quarter-finals
DR Congo qualify to play Congo in the quarter-finals, by virtue of having scored 1 more goal (that's 2 goals) than Cape Verde (who scored 1 goal). They will hope to improve their set pieces, their play at the beginning of the match, their composure at the back, and what they do with possession in the middle of the field. Nothing major.

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